The blame game : mechanistic conceptions of teacher education and its impact on schooling

dc.contributor.authorIsaacs, Tracey.en_ZA
dc.contributor.authorWaghid, Yusefen_ZA
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-31T06:18:25Z
dc.date.available2017-10-31T06:18:25Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.descriptionCITATION: Isaacs, T. & Waghid, Y. 2016. The blame game : mechanistic conceptions of teacher education and its impact on schooling. South African Journal of Higher Education, 29(6):106–123, doi:10.20853/29-6-546.
dc.descriptionThe original publication is available at http://www.journals.ac.za/index.php/sajhe
dc.description.abstractWith all the policy directives and reform initiatives post-democracy, education in South Africa is seemingly mechanistic and prodigiously carries productive logic: to produce students, to advance economic development, and so on. The active language of official educational policies is riddled with words such as assessment, efficient, high skills and progression that speaks to a technical rationality bent on turning everything into science to obscure the general meaning. In this way the process of education is comparable to a sophisticated, intellectual machine the more complex the machine becomes, the less control and understanding the teachers have of it (Braverman, 1974). In this article, we consider the ways classroom and university teachers have been brutalized through bureaucratic processes and an allegiance to technical rationality, even while we imagine hermeneutic rationality and emancipatory rationality as radical alternatives to recovering the subject in a bureaucratic tangle of educational control.en_ZA
dc.description.urihttp://www.journals.ac.za/index.php/sajhe/article/view/546
dc.description.versionPublisher's version
dc.format.extent18 pages
dc.identifier.citationIsaacs, T. & Waghid, Y. 2016. The blame game : mechanistic conceptions of teacher education and its impact on schooling. South African Journal of Higher Education, 29(6):106–123, doi:10.20853/29-6-546
dc.identifier.issn1753-5913 (online)
dc.identifier.otherdoi:10.20853/29-6-546
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/102411
dc.language.isoen_ZAen_ZA
dc.publisherHESA
dc.rights.holderAuthors retain copyright
dc.subjectEducation -- Aims and objectives -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectTeachers -- Training of -- South Africaen_ZA
dc.subjectEducational accountabilityen_ZA
dc.subjectTechnical rationalityen_ZA
dc.titleThe blame game : mechanistic conceptions of teacher education and its impact on schoolingen_ZA
dc.typeArticleen_ZA
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